Abstract
This article offers an analysis of modern energy development in Fukushima, where the twenty-first century’s first major nuclear accident occurred in 2011. Challenging the dominant narrative of state-led energy development, the article foregrounds the interplay between national energy projects and sub-national interest groups, including local politicians, entrepreneurs, and local fuel producers whose developmental visions often competed with those of the central government. By adopting an envirotechnical perspective, it also demonstrates how the sequence of past energy development projects, from woodfuel harvesting, charcoal production, and coal mining to hydropower dam construction, formed a landscape of extraction so as to enable energy export to Tokyo, and ultimately paved the way for Fukushima’s nuclear power infrastructure, which was originally developed to compensate for the decline of the pre-existing fuel industry.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Environmental History |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 9 Sept 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Not yet published as of 20/11/2024.Keywords
- energy history
- developmental state
- Fukushima
- nuclear power history
- History of Japan
- Environmental History
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Energy (miscellaneous)
- History